1600s
Chinese and Filipinos reach Mexico on ships of the Manila galleon.

1830s
Chinese "sugar masters" working in Hawaii. Chinese sailors and peddlers in New
York.

1835
U.S. and China sign first treaty.

1848
Gold discovered in California. Chinese begin to arrive.

1850
California imposes Foreign Miner's Tax and enforces it mainly against Chinese miners, who
often had to pay more than once.

1852
First group of 195 Chinese contract laborers land in Hawaii. Over 20,000 Chinese enter
California. Chinese first appear in court in California. Missionary Willian Speer opens
Presbyterian mission for Chinese in San Francisco.

1854
Chinese in Hawaii establish a funeral society, their first community association in the
islands. People v. Hall rules that Chinese can't give testimony in court. U.S. and Japan
sign first treaty.

1857
San Francisco opens a school for Chinese children (changed to an evening school two years
later). Missionary Augustus Loomis arrives to serve the Chinese in San Francisco.

1858
California passes a law to bar entry of Chinese and "Mongolians."

1860
Japan sends a diplomatic mission to U.S.

1862
Six Chinese district associations in San Francisco form loose federation. California
imposes a "police tax" of $2.50 a month on every Chinese.

1879
California's second constitution prevents municipalities and corporations from employing
Chinese. California state legislature passes law requiring all incorporated towns and
cities to remove Chinese outside of city limits, but U.S. circuit court declares the law
unconstitutional.

1880
U.S. and China sign treaty giving the U.S. the right to limit but "not absolutely
prohibit" Chinese immigration. Section 69 of California's Civil Code prohibits
issuing of licenses for marriages between whites and "Mongolians, Negroes, mulattoes
and persons of mixed blood."

1881
Hawaiian King Kalakaua visits Japan during his world tour. Sit Moon becomes pastor of the
first Chinese Christian church in Hawaii.

1882
Chinese Exclusion Law suspends immigration of laborers for ten years. Chinese community
leaders form Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association (CCBA or Chinese Six Companies)
in San Francisco. U.S. and Korea sign first treaty.

1883
Chinese in New York establish CCBA.

1884
Joseph and Mary Tape sue San Francisco school board to enroll their daughter Mamie in a
public school. Chinese Six Companies sets up Chinese language school in San Francisco.
United Chinese Society established in Honolulu. CCBA established in Vancouver. 1882
Chinese Exclusion Law amended to require a certificate as the only permissible evidence
for reentry.

1885
San Francisco builds new segregated "Oriental School." Anti-Chinese violence at
Rock Springs, Wyoming Territory. First group of Japanese contract laborers arrvies in
Hawaii under the Irwin Convention.

1886
Residents of Tacoma, Seattle, and many places in the American West forcibly expel the
Chinese. End of Chinese immigration to Hawaii. Chinese laundrymen win case in Yick Wo v.
Hopkins, which declares that a law with unequal impact on different groups is
discriminatory.

1892
Geary Law renews exclusion of Chinese laborerers for another ten years and requires all
Cihnese to register. Fong Yue Ting v. U.S. upholds constitutionality of Geary Law.

1893
Japanese in San Francisco form first trade association, the Japanese Shoemakers' League.
Attempts are made to expel Chinese from towns in sourthern California.

1894
Sun Yat-sen founds the Xingzhonghui in Honolulu. U.S. circuit court in Massachusetts
declares in In re Saito that Japanese are ineligible for naturalization. Japanese
immigration to Hawaii under Irwin Convention ends and emigration companies take over.

1895
Lem Moon Sing v. U.S. rules that district courts can no longer review Chinese habeas
corpus petitions for landing in the U.S.

1898
Wong Kim Ark v. U.S. decides that Chinese born in the U.S. can't be stripped of their
citizenship. Japanese in San Francisco set up Young Men's Buddhist Association. U.S.
annexes Hawaii and the Philippines.

1899
Chinese reformers Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao tour North America to recruit members for
the Baohuanghui. First Nishi Hongwanji priests arrive in California and set up North
American Buddhist Mission.

1902
Chinese exclusion extended for another ten years. Immigration officials and the police
raid Boston's Chinatown and, without search warrants, arrest almost 250 Chinese who
allegedly had no registration certificates on their persons.

1903
First group of Korean workers arrives in Hawaii. 1500 Japanese and Mexican sugar beet
workers strike in Oxnard, California. Koreans in Hawaii form Korean Evangelical Society.
Filipino students (pensionados) arrive in the U.S. for higher education.

1904
Chinese exclusion made indefinite and applicable to U.S. insular possessions. Japanese
plantation workers engage in first organized strike in Hawaii. Punjabi Sikhs begin to
enter British Columbia.

1905
Chinese in the U.S. and Hawaii support boycott of American products in China. Koreans
establish Korean Episcopal Church in Hawaii and Korean Methodist Church in California. San
Francisco School Board attempts to segregate Japanese schoolchildren. Korean emigration
ends. Koreans in San Francisco form Mutual Assistance Society. Asiatic Exclusion League
formed in San Francisco. Section 60 of California's Civil Code amended to forbid marriage
between whites and "Mongolians."

1906
Anti-Asian riot in Vancouver. Japanese nurserymen form California Flower Growers'
Association. Koreans establish Korean Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles. Japanese
scientists studying the aftermath of the San Francisco earthquake are stoned.

1907
Japan and the U.S. reach "Gentlemen's Agreement" whereby Japan stops issuing
passports to laborers desiring to emigrate to the U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt signs
Executive Order 589 prohibiting Japanese with passports for Hawaii, Mexico, or Canada to
reemigrate to the U.S. Koreans form United Korean Society in Hawaii. First group of
Filipino laborers arrives in Hawaii. Asian Indians are driven out of Bellingham,
Washington.

1908
Japanese form Japanese Association of America. Canada curbs Asian Indian immigrants by
denying entry to immigrants who haven't come by "continuous journey" from their
homelands (there is no direct shipping between Indian and Canadian ports). Asian Indians
are driven out of Live Oak, California.

1909
Koreans form Korean Nationalist Association. 7000 Japanese plantation workers strike major
plantations on Oahu for four months.

1910
Administrative measures used to restrict influx of Asian Indians into California.

1911
Pablo Manlapit forms Filipino Higher Wages Association in Hawaii. Japanese form Japanese
Association of Oregon in Portland.

1913
California passes alien land law prohibiting "aliens ineligible to citizenship"
from buying land or leasing it for longer than three years. Sikhs in Washington and Oregon
establish Hindustani Association. Asian Indians in California found the revolutionary
Ghadar Party and start publishing a newspaper. Pablo Manlapit forms Filipino Unemployed
Association in Hawaii. Japanese form Northwest Japanese Association of America in Seattle.
Korean farmworkers are driven out of Hemet, California.

1914
Aspiring Asian Indian immigrants who had chartered a ship to come to Canada by continuous
journey are denied landing in Vancouver.

1915
Japanese form Central Japanese Association of Southern California and the Japanese Chamber
of Commerce.

1917
Arizona passes an Alien Land Law. 1917 Immigration Law defines a geographic "barred
zone" (including India) from which no immigrants can come. Syngman Rhee founds the
Korean Christian Church in Hawaii.

1918
Servicemen of Asian ancestry who had served in World War I receive right of
naturalization. Asian Indians form the Hindustani Welfare Reform Association in the
Imperial and Coachella valleys in southern California.

1919
Japanese form Federation of Japanese Labor in Hawaii.

1920
10,000 Japanese and Filipino plantation workers go on strike. Japan stops issuing
passports to picture brides due to anti-Japanese sentiments. Initiative in California
ballot plugs up loopholes in the 1913 alien land law.

1921
Japanese farm workers driven out of Turlock, California. Filipinos establish a branch of
the Caballeros Dimas Alang in San Francisco and a branch of the Legionarios del Trabajo in
Honolulu. Washington and Louisiana pass alien land laws.

1922
Takao Ozawa v. U.S. declares Japanese not eligible for naturalized citizenship. New Mexico
passes an alien land law. Cable Act declares that any American female citizen who marries
"an alien ineligible to citizenship" would lose her citizenship.

1923
U.S. v. Bhagat Singh Thind declares Asian Indians not eligible for naturalized
citizenship. Idaho, Montana, and Oregon pass alien land laws. Terrace v. Thompson upholds
constitutionality of Washington's alien land law. Porterfield v. Webb upholds
constitutionality of California's alien land law. Webb v. O'Brien rules that sharecropping
is illegal because it is a ruse that allows Japanese to possess and use land. Frick v.
Webb forbids aliens "ineligible to citizenship" from owning stocks in
corporations formed for farming.

1941
After declaring war on Japan, 2000 Japanese community leaders along Pacific Coast states
and Hawaii are rounded up and interned in Department of Justice camps.

1942
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs Executive Order 9066 authorizing the secretary of
war to delegate a military commander to designate military areas "from which any and
all persons may be excluded" - primarily enforced against Japanese. Congress passes
Public Law 503 to impose penal sanctions on anyone disobeying orders to carry out
Executive Order 9066. Protests at Poston and Manzanar relocation centers.

1943
Protest at Topaz Relocation Center. Registration crisis leads to Tule Lake Relocation
Center's designation as a segregation center. Hawaiian Nisei in the 100th Battalion sent
to Africa. Congress repeals all Chinese exclusion laws, grants right of naturalization and
a small immigration quota to Chinese.

1946
Luce - Celler bill grants right of naturalization and small immigration quotas to Asian
Indians and Filipinos. Wing F. Ong becomes first Asian American to be elected to state
office in the Arizona House of Representatives.

1947
Amendment to 1945 War Brides Act allows Chinese American veterans to bring brides into the
U.S.

1964
Patsy Takemoto Mink becomes first Asian American woman to serve in Congress as
representative from Hawaii.

1965
Immigration Law abolishes "national origins" as basis for allocating immigration
quotas to various countries - Asian countries now on equal footing.

1968
Students on strike at San Francisco State University to demand establishment of ethnic
studies programs.

1969
Students at the University of California, Berkeley, go on strike for establishment of
ethnic studies programs.

1974
March Fong Eu elected California's secretary of state. Lau v. Nichols rules that school
districts with children who speak little English must provide them with bilingual
education.

1975
More than 130,000 refugees enter the U.S. from Vietnam, Kampuchea, and Laos as Communist
governments are established there.

1976
President Gerald Ford rescinds Executive Order 9066.

1978
National convention of the Japanese American Citizens League adopts resolution calling for
redress and reparations for the internment of Japanese Americans. Massive exodus of
"boat people" from Vietnam.

1979
Resumption of diplomatic relations between the People's Republic of China and the United
States of America reunites members of long-separated Chinese American families.

1980
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
set up an Orderly Departure Program to enable Vietnamese to emigrate legally.

1981
Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (set up by Congress) holds
hearings across the country and concludes the internment was a "grave injustice"
and that Executive Order 9066 resulted from "race prejudice, war hysteria and a
failure of political leadership."

1982
Vincent Chin, a Chinese American draftsman, is clubbed to death with a baseball bat by two
Euro-American men.

1983
Fred Korematsu, Min Yasui, and Gordon Hirabayashi file petitions to overturn their World
War II convictions for violating the curfew and evacuation orders.

1987
The U.S. House of Representatives votes 243 to 141 to make an official apology to Japanese
Americans and to pay each surviving internee $20,000 in reparations.

1988
The U.S. Senate votes 69% to 27 to support redress for Japanese Americans. American
Homecoming Act allows children in Vietnam born of American fathers to emigrate to the U.S.

1989
President George Bush signs into law an entitlement program to pay each surviving Japanese
American internee $20,000. U.S. reaches agreement with Vietnam to allow political
prisoners to emigrate to the U.S.